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Seeing it and Feeling it

Seeing it and Feeling it. Making ACT m etaphors visual and physical for young people. Timothy & Sandra Bowden, WC12 Minneapolis 2014. M etaphors.

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Seeing it and Feeling it

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  1. Seeing it and Feeling it Making ACT metaphors visual and physical for young people Timothy & Sandra Bowden, WC12 Minneapolis 2014

  2. Metaphors • Can reinforce an abstract concept by comparing it to a formal concept- and by “grounding”the abstract in ways you can touch and see, makes it more directly understandable, more connected to direct experience- more “in the moment”. • Aid with understanding • May help with recall: A study on learning reported that the use of metaphors and other strategies can “increase retention by as much as 40%” (Earl, 1995) • Reduce the pressure of too much eye contact- can be very helpful with young people • Create choice • Create opportunity for behavioural change • Can be flexible enough to help create your own meaning • Are “stories and experiences that link the richness of what you already know to domains in which you are unsure what to do” (Hayes, 2013)

  3. Metaphors in ACT aim to Disrupt Unravel Deliteralise the verbal content of our beliefs and self-talk (ie. cognitive defusion): to weaken the dominance of literal language over direct experience… • …and • Facilitate a transfer of functions between one relational network and another. Colleen Ehrnstrom, Mastering the Metaphor, WC X 2012

  4. The use of metaphors (such as the ‘monsters on the boat’) and experiential exercises (such as mindfulness activities) render ACT an appropriate treatment for young people, as concepts that would normally be too abstract to understand become accessible through experience, and children’s ability to think in less literal terms supports the use of metaphoric language (O’Brien, Larson, & Murrell, 2008).

  5. “these are a few of our favourite things…”

  6. Does this look familiar? How to make it worse for ourselves… discount Not be wholly present Think about the last time in the pit Worry about the next pit Seek to avoid at all costs Dig deeper Mentally draw all the pits together and say “this is what my life is all about”

  7. METAPHOR MATCHING Bubbles (Gundy Cuneo, 2013) The Invisibility Cloak (Bowden, 2011) Eating an apple (Ferriter, 2013) Present Moment Values Acceptance Defusion Committed Action Self as context Sushi thoughts (Bowden, 2012) Passengers on the bus (Hayes et.al. 1999) Weather board (Bowden, 2010)

  8. Connection, caring & contribution

  9. The complete picture

  10. thinking outside the CUBE http://www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/interactives/cube_creator/

  11. FFAMILY FFRIENDS AACTIVITIES CCARING EEDUCATION SSELF

  12. Feeling itUsing the experience of physical movement as metaphors for the core processes Why? • Experience vs thinking about it, provide another way of visualising the process, may aid in recalling the process when needed How? • Defusion via Wrist Escape: noticing, taking action, willingness • Acceptance via Yielding: moving toward, holding space lightly, making room • Self-as-Context & Present Moment via Stance & Push/Pull Games: tuning in to body, grounding self, responding appropriately, flexible vs inflexible responses to situations • Valued Direction & Committed Action via Ward Off & Gauntlet Run: coming into contact with compassion while moving in a valued direction, willingness, taking action despite what mind says

  13. Making the Most of Metaphors • Match the metaphor to the situation the young person is facing as closely as possible (eg. Feeling disconnected from others like having the sound cord pulled out from the TV- can see but not hear/be heard). • Conducting a functional analysis of the young person’s difficulties ensures you are targeting the relevant ACT processes, and help facilitate understanding of the similarities between the consequences seen in the metaphor, and their own situation (e.g. if the problem is related to experiential avoidance, could use a metaphor like the Hungry Tiger; if the issue relates to disconnection from values, a metaphor around a journey, or the values compass could be used). • The metaphor needs to be something the young person truly understands- experience, age, cultural background, where they live (eg. A young person from the country might not relate to a surfing metaphor). • A metaphor aims to modify behavior; how does it illustrate the option of alternative behaviors (eg. If you’ve been struggling in a “tug of war”, choosing to “drop the rope”). • Metaphors need to be memorable, so they can be generalized and reused (Humor, relatability, bizarreness can help!). Adapted from: Colleen Ehrnstrom, Mastering the Metaphor, WC X 2012; MatthieuVillate, Jennifer L. Villatte, Jean-Louis MonestèsBypassing the Traps of Language with Experiential Practice in Stoddard, J.A. & Afari, N. (2014) The Big Book of ACT Metaphors

  14. Contact us/free resources atwww.actonpurpose.com.au

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